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Thoughts From The Past Thursday: God did a miracle at Jr. High summer camp!

Thoughts from the past Thursday

This week I wanted to share with you once again one of the defining events of my life and ministry.  This was originally posted  June 28th, 2011. Enjoy!

God has done a miracle! 

This past week at Jr. High summer camp, God did an incredible miracle.  I shared with my church the story of this miracle in the main service last Sunday, so for the details of the story I will let you hear it straight from my mouth:

The Scriptures I used in this message are:

2 Timothy 3:4-5
Ephesians 6:10-12
John 8:44
Acts 2:17
Psalms 29:7
Luke 8:43-46
Philippians 4:7
1 Timothy 4:12
Acts 2:12-13
Acts 2:47
Acts 3:19
Romans 10:9-10

There are two things that God has re-iterated in my mind and heart since this miracle happened.

1. I must now do what I have been telling students to do for years

I have said to students literally hundreds of times “no one can ever argue with your changed life.”  I realize that some people are not going to believe that what we experienced at camp was real. but that decision by them does not change what happened or how real it was.  This was the most real thing I have ever experienced in my life.

2. I am seeing what I wrote in my book actually happen

I wrote in my book that youth ministry will lead the way in changing the entire church.  Not only did God do this miracle through an 8th grade boy, but during the response time on Sunday I saw teenagers who were at camp praying over adults as they accepted Christ and/or rededicated their lives to Christ.  God has begun changing our church and our youth are leading the way.  I am still amazed as I watch this happen in front of me.  Now I just need to live out what God led me to write.

Conform or Transform? 2

In my last post I talked about the reasons that led me to plan our weekend retreat the way I did.  So here is what we actually did.

On Friday night I presented to the students the 10 stops on the transformation journey as given in the book Maximum Faith by George Barna.  I described each one as I walked us all through the 10 stops.  My suspicion, which I think did prove true, was that the majority of the students on the retreat were lingering around stop six: Spiritual discontent.  I described stop 6 this way:

 

Stop 6 is where you start to feel like church isn’t doing it for you anymore, you start to ask some hard questions within yourself about faith and God and religion and how does it all fit in.  It seems like everything you hear or experience at church you have heard before…  “If this is all the church has to offer then I’m not sure I need it”

 ”Prolonged Period” you know what this means… that most people are in this stop for a long time.  Once you are there we fight moving to the next stop, no one likes to be “broken”…  Some people give up the fight and either settle into stop 5 and stay there for the rest of their life or leave the church, and maybe even their faith, all together.

 During that “fight”, we tend to point a lot of fingers, pass the blame or the responsibility, and ask some really honest and really good questions.

 

We then watched the popular internet video “Why I Hate Religion but Love Jesus”.  I then connected the video and it’s content to the transformation journey; pointing out some of the Biblical flaws in his reasoning and also confirming some of his honest and true questions.  My first main point of discussion was how religion and church are not the same thing and how we need both of them to help us through this journey.  Religion can only get you to stop 5, while the church has varying roles through all 10 stops.

The second point of discussion was centered around the concept of self-righteousness and how we have to be very careful not to become exactly what we are speaking out against.

I then gave a challenge for the students to honestly ask themselves and God what stop they are on and gave a challenge for the weekend based on the stops.

Saturday I did not speak at all.  During chapel times I gave them a scripture to meditate on, some journal questions, and 45 minutes to go off by themselves and seek God with all their heart.  We then came back together and I read aloud a narrative story based on the passage they had just read, then we sang a few worship songs.  That was it.  The two scriptures I used were John 7:53 – 8:11 and John 3:1-21; times Jesus dealt with religion and self-righteousness.

I was amazed at how much of the conversation during free time and fun activities was centered on the scriptures.  Saturday night we sat in a circle, sang a few songs and discussed what God had done or showed them.

Several of the students literally used their free time that night to pray for each other and share their experiences further.

I feel like it was one of the more Spiritually significant weekends of my entire youth ministry career, and I basically just got out of the way and let God work.  Here are two things that God taught me this weekend that I hope is helpful for you.

1. People need permission to struggle

I told the students that if they were in stop six to see it as a growth step forward, not as a bad thing.  To ask God their honest questions because God is truth and truth has nothing to hide and is not scarred of their questions or struggles.  Somehow we have created this facade that says everything has to be perfect all the time in the church and if we struggle something is wrong.  The church doesn’t always have answers, but God does, and only He can transform someone.

 2.  There are more people in stop six than we realize

One of my leadership students, who is a senior in high school said to me this weekend, “people in stop six are the ones that graduate their faith, I am in stop six and I don’t want to do that.”  The better we get at children’s and youth ministry the quicker these kids get to stop six.  A freshman in high school also shared that he was already in stop six.  The issue this presents us as youth workers is that it is nearly impossible to program brokenness.  Which is exactly the challenge we face, how can we walk through stop 6 and 7 with these students? Especially if you work with Sr. highers this is a huge question you must answer.  I hope we can figure it out together because I need your help with this one.

As I continue to seek God about what He wants me to do in youth ministry, I feel more and more drawn to changing the paradigm we have created.  I think this is at the core of it.  I think discipleship needs to be a whole lot less about us and programs and a whole lot more about them encountering God.  What do you think?

 

God did a miracle at Jr. High summer camp!

God has done a miracle! 

This past week at Jr. High summer camp, God did an incredible miracle.  I shared with my church the story of this miracle in the main service last Sunday, so for the details of the story I will let you hear it straight from my mouth:

The Scriptures I used in this message are:

2 Timothy 3:4-5
Ephesians 6:10-12
John 8:44
Acts 2:17
Psalms 29:7
Luke 8:43-46
Philippians 4:7
1 Timothy 4:12
Acts 2:12-13
Acts 2:47
Acts 3:19
Romans 10:9-10

There are two things that God has re-iterated in my mind and heart since this miracle happened.

1. I must now do what I have been telling students to do for years

I have said to students literally hundreds of times “no one can ever argue with your changed life.”  I realize that some people are not going to believe that what we experienced at camp was real. but that decision by them does not change what happened or how real it was.  This was the most real thing I have ever experienced in my life.

2. I am seeing what I wrote in my book actually happen

I wrote in my book that youth ministry will lead the way in changing the entire church.  Not only did God do this miracle through an 8th grade boy, but during the response time on Sunday I saw teenagers who were at camp praying over adults as they accepted Christ and/or rededicated their lives to Christ.  God has begun changing our church and our youth are leading the way.  I am still amazed as I watch this happen in front of me.  Now I just need to live out what God led me to write.

I Should Not Be Alive – Part 3

“I will make you lie down in green pastures.” Psalm 23:2

This was the phrase God whispered (then started to scream) to me in response to my question “Why?”  I knew that I was not being fully obedient to what God had asked me to do, which I quickly remedied as I described in part 2.  However, once my book manuscript was completed I realized this was not the only thing God wanted me to change.

The entire sentence in the 23rd Psalm is “He makes me lie down in green pastures,

He leads me beside quiet waters, He restores my soul.”  Yes, God had made me lie down; quite literally lie in a hospital bed, but what could possibly be “green” about this experience?  Just as any near death or traumatic experience tends to do, this caused me to take a pretty honest and raw look at my life.  My lack of writing was only a portion of what God wanted me to see, here are a few of the other things I have learned about myself.

1. How “loud” my life had become.

It is a pretty common thing in life, and especially youth ministry, to view busyness as a badge of honor.  I did not realize how busy my life had become until everything came to a screeching halt that Thursday evening.  I was not doing bad things, but between my young family, my church, my friends, and my hobbies my life was moving at mach 10.  Quiet waters suddenly did describe my life and I quickly realized how much I liked it.

2. How complacent I had become in my faith.

Being a pastor means that almost no one asks how your faith journey is going, and very few people ever asked me (a few people did but I often just gave the token “good” in response).  I think every Christian thinks they “give God everything” and I certainly thought I had.  Again, I wasn’t doing anything bad with my life, but I had become very comfortable in my busy life, routine devotions, and continual church involvement to where I was not growing much in my own faith.  The biggest problem with this was how comfortable I really was.  I was living an incredibly blessed life and there was no reason to change anything (so I thought).  My comfort had become a dead end rut and I had not even realized it.

3. That my soul did need restored.

God knew something needed to change for me even though I didn’t.  Many times I have thought about what my life would be like today if I had never crashed, and I can honestly say I would rather be where I am right now instead.  Being in the spiritual rut I had created was getting boring, and I was taking steps through selfish decisions to make it more exciting (like devoting a lot more time and money to dirt bikes).  Even now as I am searching for a publisher for my book and tallying more and more rejections, God continues to show me how selfish of a life I was leading.  I like to be in control, and I now see how much that has affected everything in my life including my faith.

I am still in the process of being transformed by God, and wrestling with how to ACTUALLY give God everything, but now I know God is making progress with me again.  A book that has helped me quite a bit in putting this all in perspective is Maximum Faith by George Barna.  If you have been a Christian for any length of time or are bored with your faith I highly suggest it.  My hope is you don’t have to end up within an inch of your life being over like I did for God to get your attention.

 If you are a Christian, even if you are a youth worker or pastor, how is YOUR faith journey going?  I would love to hear your answer, and don’t send me a token “everything is good”! 

I will do one more post to conclude this series including some pictures of my scraped up bike, my broken helmet, and my not broken anymore arm.

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